A2 THE ASTORIAN • SATURDAY, JANUARY 29, 2022 PROUD PERCH IN BRIEF State discloses virus cases at local schools An eagle sits atop a pole at Fort Stevens State Park at sunset. Lydia Ely/The Astorian The Oregon Health Authority has disclosed fi ve new coronavirus cases at schools in Clatsop County. All fi ve cases were from the Astoria School Dis- trict, according to the health authority’s weekly out- break report. Two cases were students from Lewis and Clark Elementary School and three cases were stu- dents from Astoria Middle School. Public meeting set for tsunami evacuation plan The public can weigh in on the Clatsop County Tsu- nami Evacuation Facilities Improvement Plan during the last public information meeting, held virtually at 5 p.m. on Tuesday. The plan considers how existing routes, such as walking and biking trails, can be improved for tsu- nami evacuation, including what can be done with facilities, trail connections and assembly areas, the county said. Visit www.ClatsopTEFIP.org for more details. The county said a link to join the virtual meeting will be posted the day of the meeting. Oser appointed to housing authority board David Oser, of Astoria, was appointed to the board of the Northwest Oregon Housing Authority at the Clatsop County Board of Commissioners meeting on Wednesday. Oser, a retired chief fi nancial offi cer at the non- profi t lender Craft3, was appointed to a four-year term through 2025. The housing authority manages properties for peo- ple with low- and- moderate-incomes in Clatsop, Columbia and Tillamook counties. The agency also oversees federal programs that aid people in need of housing assistance. Portland attorney switches to state House race Jennifer Kinzey, a Portland attorney who originally fi led to run in the Democratic primary for state Senate District 16, which encompasses the North Coast, is no longer running for the seat. She discovered that her residence falls just outside the Senate district. Kinzey, who works at Ridehalgh & Associates, has instead fi led to run in the Democratic primary for state House District 34 held by state Rep. Ken Helm, D-Beaverton. “I felt that was the place where I could make the biggest diff erence,” she said in an interview. — The Astorian Inslee pauses long-term care program for 18 months OLYMPIA, Wash. — The state of Washington has offi cially hit the pause button on a controversial long- term care insurance program known as WA Cares. Gov. Jay Inslee on Thursday signed into law a bill that delays the start of the program until July 2023, giving lawmakers 18 months to make revisions to the program and reassess its long-term solvency. — Northwest News Network ON THE RECORD Menacing DUII On the Record • Cameron Darnell • Juan Jorge Ramon Petteway, 33, of Steuben- ville, Ohio, was indicted this week for unlawful use of a weapon, menac- ing and disorderly con- duct in the second degree. The crimes are alleged to have occurred in Clatsop County earlier this month. Strangulation • Quinlan Eric Kualii Hundley, 26, of Astoria, was indicted this week for strangulation, assault in the fourth degree consti- tuting domestic violence and menacing constitut- ing domestic violence. The crimes are alleged to have occurred earlier this month. Rosales-Emanuel, 32, of Warrenton, was arrested on Thursday at S. Main Avenue and S.W. Fourth Street in Warrenton for driving under the infl u- ence of intoxicants, driv- ing while suspended, driv- ing uninsured, failing to carry and present his driv- er’s license and failing to install an ignition interlock device. • Kyle Kevin Schmidt, 34, of Olympia, Wash- ington, was arrested on Wednesday evening at Youngs River and Capps roads for DUII and reck- less driving. PUBLIC MEETINGS TUESDAY Seaside Community Center Commission, 10 a.m., Bob Chisholm Community Center, 1225 Avenue A. Port of Astoria Commission, 4 p.m., (electronic meeting). Clatsop Care Health District Board, 5 p.m., (electronic meeting). Astoria Library Board, 5:30 p.m., Flag Room, 450 10th St. Clatsop County Fair Board, 5:30 p.m., 92937 Walluski Loop, Astoria. Cannon Beach City Council, 6 p.m., (electronic meeting). Seaside Planning Commission, 6 p.m., City Hall, 989 Broadway. PUBLIC MEETINGS Established July 1, 1873 (USPS 035-000) Published Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday by EO Media Group, 949 Exchange St., PO Box 210, Astoria, OR 97103 Telephone 503-325-3211, 800-781-3211 or Fax 503-325-6573. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Astorian, PO Box 210, Astoria, OR 97103-0210 DailyAstorian.com Circulation phone number: 800-781-3214 Periodicals postage paid at Astoria, OR ADVERTISING OWNERSHIP All advertising copy and illustrations prepared by The Astorian become the property of The Astorian and may not be reproduced for any use without explicit prior approval. COPYRIGHT © Entire contents © Copyright, 2022 by The Astorian. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS MEMBER CERTIFIED AUDIT OF CIRCULATIONS, INC. Printed on recycled paper Job training a focus at state Legislature Governor has a $200 million plan By PETER WONG Oregon Capital Bureau What may be Gov. Kate Brown’s last policy initiative as governor — a $200 mil- lion plan to boost training for future jobs in construction, health care and manufactur- ing — will be one of the top items for the new session of the Oregon Legislature. Lawmakers will open the 35-day session on Tues- day as Oregon’s top political leadership undergoes major changes. It will be the fi nal scheduled session for Brown, a Democrat who is barred by term limits from running again, and for state Senate President Peter Courtney, the veteran Democrat from Salem who has led the Sen- ate for a record two decades. He is retiring after a record 38 years as a legislator. This session will be new for Rep. Dan Rayfi eld, a Democrat from Corvallis who has been nominated to succeed Tina Kotek, of Port- land, after her record nine years as House speaker. Sen. Tim Knopp, of Bend, and Rep. Vikki Breese Iverson, of Prineville, led minority Republicans for the fi rst time during the December special session. For Democratic Rep. Julie Fahey, of Eugene, it will be her fi rst session as major- ity leader. Given how contentious recent sessions have been from walkouts and slow- downs of minority Repub- licans in the past three years — and fi ve special sessions, four of them prompted by the coronavirus pandemic — the job training plan may repre- sent something that can win bipartisan approval. The Future Ready Oregon plan emerged from the Gov- ernor’s Racial Justice Coun- cil, which Brown appointed in 2020 after the onset of the coronavirus pandemic and the racial justice protests that arose from the murder of George Floyd by Minneapo- lis police . While some work focused on the state budget, the council also was asked to propose ways to deal with long-standing racial, social and economic inequities in Oregon. “Let’s be clear: COVID did not create these work- force challenges. They were created pre-pandemic. COVID exposed them,” said Patsy Richards, who led the ‘LET’S BE CLEAR: COVID DID NOT CREATE THESE WORKFORCE CHALLENGES. THEY WERE CREATED PRE-PANDEMIC. COVID EXPOSED THEM.’ Patsy Richards | leader of the council task force that shaped the plan council task force that shaped the plan. The plan is aimed not only at past injustices, but future shortages of trained workers — estimated at 300,000 — in three growing economic sectors. Richards, who is Black, said the plan takes into account the need for full par- ticipation in Oregon’s work- force by racial and eth- nic minorities, and also by women, young workers, mil- itary veterans and former inmates in jails and prisons. “If we do not respond to these workforce indicators, we will miss the opportunity to lead the next generation of Oregonians to economic prosperity for all,” said Rich- ards, who is the director of long-term Care Works for the RISE Partnership in Portland. Brown previewed the plan at the annual Oregon Busi- ness Plan conference in early December . One of the con- ference sponsors is the Ore- gon Business Council, which a decade ago set a goal of a 10% statewide poverty rate by 2020. Oregon’s actual rate in 2021 was 12.44%, slightly less than the national average of 13.4%. Duncan Wyse is the long- time president of the Oregon Business Council. “We have immediate needs,” he said. “Employ- ers need talent right now, and there are a lot of Ore- gonians who are looking for new careers as they’ve gone through the pandemic. (This program) really is trying to reimagine how we provide education and training ser- vices to adults.” The plan would draw $200 million from the state’s tax-supported general fund and federal money from the American Rescue Plan Act, President Joe Biden’s pan- demic recovery plan that Congress passed almost a year ago. Major spending catego- ries are: • $92.5 million to expand existing programs. Among them: $35 million for local workforce programs; $20 million for apprenticeship DIGITAL EZpay (per month) .................................................................................................................$8.25 Please ADOPT A PET! 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Though Oregon has regained many of the jobs lost during the onset of the pandemic in spring 2020, “these are aimed at ensur- ing that Oregon’s recovery is equitable,” said Jennifer Pur- cell, Brown’s workforce pol- icy adviser. “The disruption created by the pandemic has exac- erbated the workforce crisis, as well as highlighted signif- icant disparities in how our workforce system serves Ore- gon’s communities of color,” which Purcell said have been aff ected to a greater extent than Oregon as a whole. “Barriers to job readiness and career advancement persist, which is made more diffi cult by a workforce system that is often siloed, ineffi cient, and diffi cult to navigate.” The plan has its doubters. “I am concerned about selecting winners and losers” among job sectors, said Rep. Brad Witt, D-Clatskanie, a longtime labor offi cial who is leaving the Legislature after 18 years. Rep. Jami Cate, a Repub- lican from Lebanon and a farmer, questioned how much the plan would help in rural areas. “Given that we have a shortage of workers already, in some cases we are going to be enticing them to quit,” said Rep. John Lively, a Democrat from Springfi eld and chair- man of the House committee that heard the plan. “There are complex issues that are going to be part of this con- versation we need to have in this session.” Gail Krumenauer, econo- mist for the Oregon Employ- ment Department, spoke briefl y to the House commit- tee earlier this month. In a Jan. 19 conference call with reporters, she touched on why there are shortages now. The agency reported 103,000 job vacancies in the private sector in the fi nal quarter of 2021 — down from a record 107,000 in the previous quarter — and that employers said 76% were considered hard to fi ll. The previous record was 67,000 jobs in summer 2017. “We are seeing this extraordinary level of hir- ing across the United States,” Krumenauer said. “There are simply not enough available workers for this near-record level of job openings that employers are trying to fi ll.” For every 10 jobs open, she said, seven workers are potentially available. Average starting pay in the last quar- ter of 2021 was $21 per hour, a 14% increase over the pre- vious year, even taking infl a- tion into account. “There is not one thing that can magically be done to help all the workers fi nd jobs with employers to supply all the workers they need,” David Gerstenfeld, the act- ing director of the Oregon Employment Department, told reporters. “Some people do not rec- ognize they have transfer- able skills,” he said. “We can help them fi ll a gap so they can move into some of those high-demand occupations.” The Oregon Capital Bureau is a collaboration between EO Media Group and Pamplin Media Group. 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